Jets fans have endured a lot in the last year, from the failed Tim Tebow experiment to the 6-10 season and the Buttfumble.

Now, they are watching as their team is dangling star cornerback Darrelle Revis on the trade market and many are unhappy. Jets coach Rex Ryan and general manager John Idzik will find out how angry fans are today when they conduct a conference call with season-ticket holders.

“I think they did sell us a whole bill of goods with this stadium and who they were going to put on the field and keeping stars like Darrelle,” said Jon Miller, whose family has had season tickets since the 1960s. “Now, on top of it, we’re a circus again. We’re the laughingstocks of football all over again.”

Owner Woody Johnson, who needs to answer questions about Revis, will not be on the call. He danced around Revis questions in January at Idzik’s introductory press conference and has been in hiding since. Johnson sent a letter to season-ticket holders last month.

“It is my job each year to put a team on the field that makes you proud,” Johnson’s letter read. “Last season that didn’t happen. I am disappointed about our results; I know they were unacceptable to all of you as well. We are working hard to turn the page.”

Will that new page include Revis?

The Jets must decide whether to pay Revis long-term or trade him or let him leave as a free agent next year. Many Jets fans saw Revis as the first star the team would have for his entire career. Even Joe Namath did not finish his career as a Jet.

Miller, 51, said losing Revis would be another body blow to an already staggered fan base. Miller, who works in the real estate business and lives on Long Island, has two seats at MetLife Stadium. He pays $15,000 each for the personal seat license (PSL) and an additional $300 per ticket per game, including preseason, of course.

As he has watched the Jets slide backwards from a team that went to back-to-back AFC Championship games to the current group that looks as if it could be one of the worst in the NFL in 2013, he has begun to question his investment.

“If anybody starts up a class-action lawsuit on these PSLs, I would have no problem joining it,” Miller said. “I just think it’s a farce. They’re going to put a team on that field next year that is a bunch of amateurs.”

Dr. Arthur Kozin has been a season-ticket holder since 1995. He endured the 1-15 season in 1996, then saw the team turn around. Kozin said when he invested in his four PSLs ($5,000 each) he felt as if Johnson was beginning to run the Jets the way George Steinbrenner did the Yankees — win at all costs. But now he feels a Revis trade would signify the team heading in the wrong direction.

“To me, it would say that here we have the quote/unquote best cornerback in the league and I think that the way Rex predicates his defense is having shutdown cornerbacks so he can blitz,” said Kozin, who lives in Suffern, N.Y. “I think that would kind of have him play defense with one arm behind his back. He wouldn’t have a shutdown defense. I think defenses win championships. I’d be upset if a player of Revis’ caliber is not on the team when they have a chance to sign him and keep him happy.”

Johnson and the Jets must not only worry about keeping Revis happy with this decision, but also their customers, many of whom are fed up with the franchise.